Blog Post | Mineral Production
The Most Important Check in Economics
The Simon–Ehrlich wager and why predictions of resource scarcity keep getting it wrong.
Professor Gale L. Pooley teaches U.S. economic history at Utah Tech University. He is an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute, a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute, and a board member of HumanProgress.org. Subscribe to his Substack, Gald Winds.
Blog Post | Mineral Production
The Simon–Ehrlich wager and why predictions of resource scarcity keep getting it wrong.
Gale L. Pooley, Marian L. Tupy —
Blog Post | Cost of Material Goods
Workers today get 214 refrigerators for the time price of one in 1925.
Gale L. Pooley —
Always compare prices to hourly wages to understand the true change in living standards.
Gale L. Pooley —
Blog Post | Cost of Material Goods
Entry-level workers can get 20.9 bicycles today for the time it took to earn one in 1910.
Gale L. Pooley —
Measure the time needed to earn the money to pay for a meal. That’s what matters.
Marian L. Tupy, Gale L. Pooley —
Blog Post | Cost of Material Goods
Since 1990, grocery abundance has increased by 43.2 percent and pizza abundance by 285 percent for blue-collar workers. If you were upskilling, it was 186 percent for groceries and 610 percent for pizzas.
Gale L. Pooley —
Blog Post | Cost of Material Goods
Get 14.5 toys today for the price of one in 1978.
Gale L. Pooley —
Housing amenity abundance has increased significantly since 1956.
Gale L. Pooley —